Installation view, Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany. Photo: Roman März © Adam Pendleton Museum Exhibitions Adam Pendleton Can I Be? Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026Langen FoundationNeuss, Germany Langen Foundation is delighted to present Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, a major solo exhibition that explores abstraction, language, and history—examining how these forces converge in unlikely and poetic ways. Pendleton, a central figure in contemporary American art, is known for paintings that have redefined the boundaries of abstraction. Upending linear compositional logic, his paintings are created through a distilled layering of gesture, fragment, and form. Each work comes to life through expressionistic flourishes, stark contrasts, and subtle uses of material, tone, and finish, combined with a precision reminiscent of Minimal and Conceptual art. In 2008, he began to define his working method as ‘Black Dada’—a critical framework for exploring the relationship between Blackness, abstraction, and the historical avant-gardes—for which he is now widely recognized. Read More Installation view, Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany. Photo: Roman März © Adam Pendleton The exhibition opens with a monumental black pavilion containing Pendleton’s video work Toy Soldier (Notes on Robert E. Lee, Richmond, Virginia/Strobe) (2021–22). This work features the Robert E. Lee Monument, which stood in Richmond, Virginia—the former Confederate capital—for over 130 years before its removal in 2021. Through stroboscopic effects and fragmented imagery, the video breaks down the monument’s form, obscuring and inverting its presence on screen. The soundtrack interweaves poet Amiri Baraka’s staccato reading of Dope (1980) with Hahn Rowe’s score of strings, woodwinds, and percussion.In contrast to the pavilion’s scale, Untitled (2026), a small black ceramic painting bearing three floating, silvery orbital forms, sets up a moment of intimate contemplation. Its restrained visual syntax invites heightened attention to space, volume, and form, setting a tone of concentration and perceptual awareness that defines the viewing experience throughout Can I Be?. Installation view, Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany. Photo: Roman März © Adam Pendleton The exhibition includes a selection of paintings and drawings from Pendleton’s Black Dada and Days bodies of work that reveal the full range of the artist’s gestural and material investigations in painting. Pendleton’s works begin on paper with drips, splatters, sprays, geometric shapes, words and phrases, and inky fragments reminiscent of broken letters. Over time, these marks accumulate in the studio, documenting the temporal reality of the artist’s mark-making. The layered compositions are photographed and then translated onto black canvas through a screen-printing process. The resulting works emphasize process, translation, and transformation—treating painting not as a fixed object but as an evolving system of thought and action.One of the building’s large rectangular volumes houses Pendleton’s most extensive presentation of Days drawings to date. Arranged as a continuous horizon line, the installation explores the possibilities of abstraction at a small yet intense scale. Subtle and generative, they balance visual play with rigor and restraint. A triangular pavilion houses the video work Resurrection City Revisited (Who Owns Geometry Anyway?) (2024– 25). Resurrection City was a peaceful, permitted encampment of 3,000 A-frame structures that occupied 16 acres between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument in Washington, DC, from May to June 1968. Conceived as the culmination of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Poor People’s Campaign, the temporary city drew national attention to entrenched economic and social inequities across racial and geographic lines. Pendleton’s video brings together archival documentation of Resurrection City with a recording of Amiri Baraka reading his poem I Love Music: For John Coltrane (1982). These historical elements are intercut and overlaid with abstract shapes and gestural moments that echo the formal and theoretical concerns of Pendleton’s paintings and Toy Soldier (Notes on Robert E. Lee, Richmond, Virginia/Strobe).Pendleton’s engagement with language and abstraction extends into a group of eight floor-based ceramic sculptures derived from a loose visual interpretation of Morse code. Pushing this “universal” language toward abstraction, Pendleton treats code as both method and form. The painterly ceramic objects extend the exhibition’s exploration of translation—between language and signal, material and image—bringing the exhibition to a close through spatial intimacy, rhythm, and embodied presence. Read More Installation view, Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany. Photo: Roman März © Adam Pendleton Installation view, Adam Pendleton: Can I Be?, Apr 19 – Sep 20, 2026, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany. Photo: Roman März © Adam Pendleton Adam Pendleton: Can I Be? positions abstraction not as a retreat, but as an active, critical mode—one capable of holding history, politics, and perception in productive tension. In dialogue with Tadao Ando’s architecture, the exhibition unfolds as a sustained meditation on how form can think, remember, and reimagine the conditions of the present while casting powerful projections toward the future.Adam Pendleton: Can I Be? is curated by Nadim Samman. (opens in a new window) Learn more at langenfoundation.de. Read More Journal View All Films The Intimacies of Drawing: Joan Jonas and Adam Pendleton in Conversation May 23, 2025 News Works from "Adam Pendleton: Who Is Queen?" Acquired by MoMA May 05, 2025 Pace Publishing Adam Pendleton: An Abstraction Apr 01, 2025 Museum Exhibitions Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen at the Hirshhorn Oct 08, 2024 Museum Exhibitions — Adam Pendleton at the Langen Foundation, Apr 19, 2026